Abstract

Only 15-20% of patients with chronic hepatitis C achieve a sustained virological response with interferon therapy. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of interferon alpha2b in combination with oral ribavirin with interferon alone, for treatment of chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV). 832 patients aged 18 years or more with chronic HCV who had not been treated with interferon or ribavirin, were enrolled and randomly allocated one of three regimens: 3 mega units (MU) interferon alpha2b three times a week plus 1000-1200 mg ribavirin per day for 48 weeks; 3 MU interferon alpha2b three times a week plus 1000-1200 mg ribavirin per day for 24 weeks; or 3 MU interferon alpha2b three times a week and placebo for 48 weeks. All patients were assessed for safety, tolerance, and efficacy at the end of weeks 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8, and every 4 weeks during treatment. After treatment was completed patients were followed up on weeks 4, 8, 12, and 24. The primary endpoint was loss of detectable HCV-RNA (serum HCV-RNA <100 copies/mL) at week 24 after treatment. Sustained virological response at 24 weeks after treatment, was found in 119 (43%) of the 277 patients treated for 48 weeks with the combination regimen, 97 (35%) of the 277 patients treated for 24 weeks with the combination regimen (p=O.055), and 53 (19%) of the 278 patients treated for 48 weeks with interferon alone (p<0.001 vs both combination regimens, intention-to-treat analysis). Logistic regression identified five independent factors significantly associated with response: genotype 2 or 3, viral load less than 2 million copies/mL, age 40 years or less, minimal fibrosis stage, and female sex. Among patients with fewer than three of these factors the odds ratio of sustained response was 2.6 (95% Cl 1.4-4.8; p=0.002) for the 48 week combination regimen compared with 24 weeks of the combination regimen. Discontinuation of therapy for adverse events was more frequent with combination (19%) and monotherapy (13%) given for 48 weeks than combination therapy given for 24 weeks (8%). An interferon alpha2b plus ribavirin combination is more effective than 48 weeks of interferon alpha2b monotherapy and has an acceptable safety profile. Patients with few favourable factors benefit more from extending the duration of combination therapy to 48 weeks.

Keywords

RibavirinMedicineRegimenInternal medicineGastroenterologyInterferonPlaceboHepatitis CHepatitis C virusInterferon alfaAlpha interferonImmunologyVirusPathology

MeSH Terms

AdministrationOralAdultAntiviral AgentsDrug Administration ScheduleDrug TherapyCombinationFemaleGenotypeHepatitis CChronicHumansInterferon alpha-2Interferon-alphaMaleMiddle AgedRNAViralRecombinant ProteinsRibavirin

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Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
352
Issue
9138
Pages
1426-1432
Citations
2330
Access
Closed

Citation Metrics

2330
OpenAlex
47
Influential
1736
CrossRef

Cite This

Thierry Poynard, Patrick Marcellin, Samuel S. Lee et al. (1998). Randomised trial of interferon α2b plus ribavirin for 48 weeks or for 24 weeks versus interferon α2b plus placebo for 48 weeks for treatment of chronic infection with hepatitis C virus. The Lancet , 352 (9138) , 1426-1432. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(98)07124-4

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(98)07124-4
PMID
9807989

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%